Essential Brazilian Films

It is not a easy job making a list of Brazilian Films. Many of these films aren’t available on DVD even in Brazil. You could find them on Internet, but probably you won’t find subtitles. So I am wandering if make sense pointing out films that you couldn’t see.
This list is based on:
Cinema Novo (New Cinema). During the 1960s and early 1970s, Brazilian filmakers were inspired by Italian Neo-Realism and the French New Wave, having the motto “Hands on a camera and an idea in the mind”. The low-budget films were themed about Brazilian reality (poverty, under-development, political issues, etc) which was a rare theme in Brazilian cinema until…
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It is not a easy job making a list of Brazilian Films. Many of these films aren’t available on DVD even in Brazil. You could find them on Internet, but probably you won’t find subtitles. So I am wandering if make sense pointing out films that you couldn’t see.

This list is based on:Cinema Novo (New Cinema). During the 1960s and early 1970s, Brazilian filmakers were inspired by Italian Neo-Realism and the French New Wave, having the motto “Hands on a camera and an idea in the mind”. The low-budget films were themed about Brazilian reality (poverty, under-development, political issues, etc) which was a rare theme in Brazilian cinema until then. The greatest directors were Nelson Pereira dos Santos (his masterpiece Vidas Secas aka Barren Lives is the cornestone of the movement), Glauber Rocha (who is the most proeminent of them), Ruy Guerra, Joaquim Pedro de Andrade, Leon Hirszman, Maurice Capovilla, Paulo Cesar Saraceni and Carlos Diegues’s early films.

Cinema Marginal (Underground Cinema): Virtually in the same years of Cinema Novo, this moviment emerged in the late 1960s and extending until late 70s. Based mainly in São Paulo (while Cinema Novo was based in Rio de Janeiro), the movement was more radical focused on experimentalism, the subversion of language of cinema (although both Cinema Novo and Marginal had similar political views). The greatest directors were Ozualdo Candeiais, Rogerio Sganzerla and Júlio Bressane along with Andrea Tonacci, Neville D’Almeida, Fernando Coni Campos, Carlos Reichenbach and others.

Retomada (“Rebirth”). Brazilian cinema almost died in the first half of 1990s with reasons that aren’t need to be mentioned now but since 1995 a generation of filmakers emerged helping to give a new life to Brazilian cinema. Retomada isn’t a film movement but just a label to this new era. The films varies from Walter Salles’s sensitive films through urban violence well known by Fernando Meirelles’s City of God (2002). Other recongnized directors are Beto Brant, Claudio Assis, Jorge Furtado, José Padilha, Karim Aïnouz and many others.

My favourite Brazilian film of the last 30 years: Luiz Fernando Carvalho’s Lavoura Arcaica aka In the Left of the Father (2001)

In other years and decades (prior 1960s and between 1975 and 95), few films I consider as really good. Expections are Mario Peixoto’s Limite (1931), a hidden masterpiece but got some “popularity” among hardcore cinephiles and Lima Barreto’s O Cangaceiro (1953), which is the first Brazilian film with some international sucess. Nelson Pereira dos Santos’s early films have to mentioned Rio 40 Graus (1955) and Rio Zona Norte (1957). Finally, the father of Brazilian Cinema Humbero Mauro, who his masterpiece is Ganga Bruta (1933).

I watched over 1000 Brazilian films, so I believe I can give a good coverage (My wish list is based on very rare films): Here a NOT definitive list: